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Griffith Stadium

By Wikipedia

Griffith Stadium was a sports stadium that stood in Washington, D.C. from 1911 to 1965, at the corner of Georgia Avenue and W Street, NW.

At a glance...
GRIFFITH STADIUM
Facility statistics
Location 7th & Florida
Washington, DC
Broke ground 1911
Opened July 24, 1911
Closed September 21, 1961
Demolished January 26, 1965
Replaced American League Park II
Replaced by D.C Stadium (RFK)
Owner Washington Senators
Surface Grass
Architect Osborn Engineering
Tenants
Washington Senators (MLB, 1911-1960)
Washington Senators II (MLB, 1961)
Washington Redskins (NFL, 1937-1960)
Seating capacity
32,000 (1921), 30, 171 (1936)
35,000 (1952), 27,550 (1961)
Dimensions
Left Field - 388 ft
Left-Center - 360 ft
Center Field - 421 ft
Right-Center - 373 ft
Right Field - 320 ft
Backstop - 61 ft

An earlier wooden baseball park that stood on the site, National Park (also called American League Park), was built in 1891, was destroyed by a fire during spring training on March 17, 1911, and replaced by a steel and concrete structure, also called National Park; it was renamed for Washington Senators owner Clark Griffith in 1920. The stadium was home to the American League Senators from 1911 to 1960, and an expansion team of the same name in 1961. It served as a part-time home for the Negro League team called the Homestead Grays during the 1930s and 40s. It was also home to the Washington Redskins of the National Football League from the time they transferred from Boston in 1937 through the 1960 season.

Fly to the site of Griffith Stadium!
If you have Google Earth installed, click here to be "flown" to the site of the Griffith Stadium. Of course the stadium is no longer there, but you can see the neighborhood. (If you do not have it installed, get it from Google. It allows you to view virtually anywhere on Earth in 3D using satellite imagery.)


William Howard Taft began the tradition of presidents throwing out the ceremonial first pitch of the baseball season at Griffith Stadium. A big baseball fan (in more ways than one), legend has it that he also inadvertently inaugurated the tradition of the Seventh-inning stretch.

The stadium was laid out at an unusual angle within its block in the Washington street grid. Thus, it was over 400 feet down the left field line to the bleachers (though this distance was shortened in later years by the construction of an inner fence). The fence also took an unusual right-angled jut into right-center field where a large tree and several apartment buildings stood, due to the unwillingness of the owners of the tree and those nearby houses to sell to the Nationals owners during construction of the stadium. The right field fence angled away from the infield sharply which, in addition to a 30-foot "spite" fence about 8 feet inside the lower, outer wall, meant that relatively few home runs were hit at the stadium.

The distance fences were no problem for sluggers like Josh Gibson, Mickey Mantle and the Senators' own youngster Harmon Killebrew. Gibson is reported to have hit baseballs over the left field bleachers twice. Mantle hit one that was so impressive that someone tried to determine its flight with some precision, thus popularizing the term "Tape Measure Home Run".

Griffith Stadium!

That is no optical illusion - the field really is sloped downward! This is the second American League Park in Washington that burned down in 1910. It is the same exactly location as the later Griffith Park that was rebuilt from the rubble of the previous park. The first American League Park's stands were moved to this location to create the second AL Park. This second park is seen here on May 1, 1906.

Photo by George Lawrence courtesy of NARA


FIRSTS at GRIFFITH STADIUM
Game
04/12/1911 Red Sox 5, Senators 8
Umpires Tommy Connolly, John Mullin
Managers Jimmy McAleer, Senators
  Patsy Donovan, Red Sox
Starting Pitchers Dolly Gray, Senators
  Joe Wood, Red Sox
Ceremonial Pitch President William Howard Taft
Attendance 16,000 (est.)
Batting
Batter Larry Gardner (line out)
Hit Tom Madden (single)
Run Tom Madden
RBI Tom Madden
Single Tom Madden
Double Joe Wood
Triple Larry Gardner (04/13/1911)
Home Run Eddie Collins (05/06/1911)
Grand Slam Doc Gessler (06/02/1911)
IPHR Eddie Collins (05/05/1911)
Stolen Base Clyde Milan
Sacrifice Hit Buff Williams
Sacrifice Fly Eddie Ainsmith (05/04/1911)
Cycle Bob Meusel (05/07/1921)
Pitching
Win Dolly Gray
Loss Joe Wood
Shutout Tom Hughes (04/18/1911)
Save N/A
Hit by Pitch Ed Karger hit Doc Gessler
Wild Pitch Dolly Gray
Balk Hippo Vaughn (04/18/1911)
No-Hitter Bobby Burke (08/08/1931)
Primary research by Jim Herdman & David Vincent
Courtesy of Retrosheet
.

Aside from some championship seasons in the early 1920s and 1930s, the Senators teams that played at Griffith Stadium were legendarily bad. The hapless Washington team became the butt of a well-known Vaudeville joke, "First in war, first in peace, and last in the American League," a twist on the famous "Light Horse Harry" Lee eulogy of George Washington: "First in war, first in peace and first in the hearts of his countrymen."

Supposedly, Senators groundskeepers ensured that it was actually slightly downhill towards first base in order to give sluggish Senators players an extra step.

In the fall of 1961, the Redskins and Senators moved to the newly built D.C. Stadium (which was re-named R.F.K. Stadium in 1968). Griffith Stadium was demolished in 1965 and Howard University Hospital now stands on the site.

Related Books on Ballparks
The Ballpark Book: A Journey Through the Fields of Baseball Magic by Ron Smith and Kevin Belford.
Ballpark: The Story of America's Baseball Fields by Lynn Curlee
Ballparks: A Panoramic History by Marc Sandalow and Jim Sutton.
Ballparks by Robert Von Goeben and Red Howard.
Ballparks: Then & Now by Eric Enders.
Baseball Vacations: Great Family Trips to Minor League and Classic Major League Ballbarks Across America by Bruce Adams and Margaret Engel.
Blue Skies, Green Fields: A Celebration of 50 Major League Baseball Stadiums by Ira Rosen.
Diamonds: The Evolution of the Ballpark by Michael Gershman.
Fields of Dreams: A Guide to Visiting and Enjoying All 30 Major League Ballparks by Jay Ahuja
Green Cathedrals: The Ultimate Celebration of All Major League and Negro League Ballparks by Philip J. Lowry.
Joe Mock's Ballpark Guide by Joe Mock.
Lost Ballparks: A Celebration of Baseball's Legendary Fields by Lawrence S. Ritter.
Roadside Baseball: A Guide to Baseball Shrines Across America by Chris Epting.
Take Me Out to the Ballpark: An Illustrated Tour of Baseball Parks Past and Present by Josh Leventhal and Jessica Macmurray.
The Ultimate Baseball Road-Trip: A Fan's Guide to Major League Stadiums by Joshua Pahigian and Kevin O'Connell.
Video: Story of America's Classic Ballparks
Video: Baseball: A Film by Ken Burns

Economics of Stadiums
:
City Baseball Magic: Plain Talk and Uncommon Sense about Cities and Baseball Parks by Philip Bess.
Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money into Private Profit by Joanna Cagan and Neil deMause.
Public Dollars, Private Stadiums: The Battle over Building Sports Stadiums by Kevin J. Delaney and Rick Eckstein.
Sports, Jobs, and Taxes: The Economic Impact of Sports Teams and Stadiums by Roger G. Noll and Andrew Zimbalist.

General Stadium Reference:
Sports Staff of USA Today. The Complete 4 Sport Stadium Guide. Fodor's, 1996.

Stadium Design and Financing References:
Philip Bess. City Baseball Magic: Plain Talk and Uncommon Sense about Cities and Baseball Parks. Knothole Press, 1999.
Joanna Cagan and Neil deMause. Field of Schemes: How the Great Stadium Swindle Turns Public Money into Private Profit. Common Courage Press, 1998.
Mark S. Rosentraub. Major League Losers: The Real Cost of Sports and Who's Paying for It. HarperCollins, 1997.
Kevin J. Delaney, Rick Eckstein. Public Dollars, Private Stadiums: The Battle over Building Sports Stadiums. Rutgers University Press, 2004.
Roger G. Noll and Andrew Zimbalist. Sports, Jobs, and Taxes: The Economic Impact of Sports Teams and Stadiums. Brookings Institution, 1997.
Dean V. Baim. The Sports Stadium as a Municipal Investment. Greenwood Publishing, 1994.
Stadia: A Design and Development Guide by Geraint John and Rod Sheard. Architectural Press, 2000.
Michelle Provoost, Matthjis Bouw and Camiel Van Winkel. The Stadium: Architecture of Mass Sport. NAI Publishers, 2000.


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GRIFFITH STADIUM

NARA Photo

Year by Year statistics: for Griffith Stadium


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This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from this Wikipedia article, which is probably more up to date than ours (retrieved August 12, 2005).

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